Southeast Asia's shipwreck diving spots

Countless wrecks, like this F-4 Phantom jet in the Philippines' Subic Bay, can be reached from coasts across Southeast Asia.


From Yahoo Life
 

Shopping in Singapore, looking down from the Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, taking in the massive ancient temples in Cambodia’s Angkor Wat and Borobudur on Java: Tropical Southeast Asia is hardly short of things to do for tourists or places to go.

Some of the region's best attractions are not on land or even above the sea-level, however. Diving is another reason Southeast Asia is popular with tourists, and East Timor, Raja Ampat in Indonesia, Thailand’s Similan Islands and Sipadan near Malaysian Borneo are among the world's best-regarded locations.

But the region arguably even has untapped potential for divers, or at least those who don’t mind having shipwrecks making up the submarine scenery alongside rainbow-hued coral and glimmering shoals of fish.

Recognising the potential heritage value of such wrecks, Indonesia’s government in 2018 established a conservation zone around the Perth, an Australian warship that was sunk during the World War II Battle of the Sunda Strait and now lies around 40 metres below the surface of the sea separating Java and Sumatra.

In a recent article for History Today, the University of Sydney’s Natali Pearson said the region’s sunken ships "are easily overlooked in the legacy landscape of the Second World War," particularly when compared with wrecks from the period in European waters.


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shipwreck wreck Asia Diving

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